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Restored

We’re getting there. Steve’s back is feeling better daily. And the computer? I just have a couple more programs to install and we’re back in business. Seriously. When I originally started backing it up at IBackup, it took two days for all of the files to download from our desktop to the site. I figured with the files I’ve added since then – mostly pictures, lots and lots of pictures – it would take three days for it to restore everything. So I didn’t even try starting it until this morning after Steve finished and submitted another draft of his paper last night. I started it this morning and about three hours later, it was done. And it didn’t just say it was done – the files really are all back on my hard drive just as though I was working downstairs on our old desktop. Amazing! I wonder if the slowness we’ve been experiencing with that computer as of late was a sign of things to come…

The garden still isn’t planted, though. I was going to do it this morning. I started out by going on our walk, and when we had just about reached our turn-around point, Joey started crying as though I’d abandoned him on the side or the road of something. No amount of reassurance that Mommy is still here, she is just pushing the stroller, see? you can look up and see her could prevail. He wailed all the way home. He did that yesterday too when I left him with Steve’s grandma and aunt while we went out to a field to take some pictures of corn for Steve’s paper. I think it’s the separation anxiety stage…along with some teething, perhaps? We shall see.

When he gets like that, the only solution is for me to hold him. So I held him for about an hour. Then he went to sleep for his nap. The garden is too far from the house for me to be able to hear him through an open window. Now that his nap is over, we’re getting some of the scattered showers predicted in today’s forecast. I mean, I really don’t want to give up since I bought the seeds and grew some plants and all, but I keep wondering if my garden for this year is doomed.

But here we go again. He’s been awake for an hour and even though his tummy is full and his diaper is dry and he has all his favorite toys and mommy is sitting right next to him looking up at him and smiling…we’re starting to fuss and cry. So please forgive any typos while I go tend to Mr. High Maintenance…

In Honor…

Mikey’s Funnies is an email list I am subscribed to where you get “clean” funnies in your mailbox daily (M-F). This is the one he sent out for Memorial Day last Friday – I loved it so much I just had to share. [I especially like his intro about how we’re paying tribute to those who gave their lives so we could disagree with each other.] Links for subscribing are at the end.

fromMIKEY==================================

On the eve of Memorial Day weekend, this is my annual tribute to our troops who have given their all for our freedoms. I know there are many on this list who don’t agree with my views, but as the dad of a U.S. Marine, I have to express my humble appreciation for those who gave their life so we could disagree with each other.

I know this coming Monday is not Memorial Day everywhere – as it is in the U.S. – but any day is a good day to honor those who have fought – and fallen – for our freedoms.

The Funnies will be silent Monday in honor of our fallen heroes.

Mikey

today’s”FUNNY”=============================

ALL THE GOOD THINGS
By Sister Helen P. Mrosla

He was in the first third grade class I taught at Saint Mary’s School in Morris, Minn. All 34 of my students were dear to me, but Mark Eklund was one in a million. Very neat in appearance, but had that happy-to-be-alive attitude that made even his occasional mischievousness delightful.

Mark talked incessantly. I had to remind him again and again that talking without permission was not acceptable. What impressed me so much, though, was his sincere response every time I had to correct him for misbehaving: “Thank you for correcting me, Sister!” I didn’t know what to make of it at first, but before long I became accustomed to hearing it many times a day.

One morning my patience was growing thin when Mark talked once too often, and then I made a novice-teacher’s mistake. I looked at him and said, “If you say one more word, I am going to tape your mouth shut!”

It wasn’t ten seconds later when Chuck blurted out, “Mark is talking again.” I hadn’t asked any of the students to help me watch Mark, but since I had stated the punishment in front of the class, I had to act on it.

I remember the scene as if it had occurred this morning. I walked to my desk, very deliberately opened my drawer and took out a roll of masking tape. Without saying a word, I proceeded to Mark’s desk, tore off two pieces of tape and made a big X with them over his mouth.

I then returned to the front of the room. As I glanced at Mark to see how he was doing he winked at me.

That did it! I started laughing. The class cheered as I walked back to Mark’s desk, removed the tape and shrugged my shoulders. His first words were, “Thank you for correcting me, Sister.”

At the end of the year I was asked to teach junior-high math. The years flew by, and before I knew it Mark was in my classroom again. He was more handsome than ever and just as polite. Since he had to listen carefully to my instructions in the “new math,” he did not talk as much in ninth grade as he had in the third.

One Friday, things just didn’t feel right. We had worked hard on a new concept all week, and I sensed that the students were frowning, frustrated with themselves–and edgy with one another. I had to stop this crankiness before it got out of hand. So I asked them to list the names of the other students in the room on two sheets of paper, leaving a space between each name. Then I told them to think of the nicest thing they could say about each of their classmates and write it down.

It took the remainder of the class period to finish the assignment, and as the students left the room, each one handed me the papers. Charlie smiled. Mark said, “Thank you for teaching me, Sister. Have a good weekend.”

That Saturday, I wrote down the name of each student on a separate sheet of paper, and I listed what everyone else had said about that individual. On Monday I gave each student his or her list. Before long, the entire class was smiling. “Really?” I heard whispered. “I never knew that meant anything to anyone!” “I didn’t know others liked me so much!”

No one ever mentioned those papers in class again. I never knew if they discussed them after class or with their parents, but it didn’t matter. The exercise had accomplished its purpose. The students were happy with themselves and one another again.

That group of students moved on. Several years later, after I returned from vacation, my parents met me at the airport. As we were driving home, Mother asked me the usual questions about the trip–the weather, my experiences in general. There was a light lull in the conversation. Mother gave Dad a sideways glance and I simply said, “Dad?” My father cleared his throat as he usually did before something important. “The Eklunds called last night,” he began.

“Really?” I said. “I haven’t heard from them in years. I wonder how Mark is.”

Dad responded quietly. “Mark was killed in Vietnam,” he said. “The funeral is tomorrow, and his parents would like it if you could attend.” To this day I can still point to the exact spot on I-494 where Dad told me about Mark.

I had never seen a serviceman in a military coffin before. Mark looked so handsome, so mature. All I could think at that moment was, Mark, I would give all the masking tape in the world if only you would talk to me.

The church was packed with Mark’s friends. Chuck’s sister sang “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” Why did it have to rain on the day of the funeral? It was difficult enough at the graveside. The pastor said the usual prayers, and the bugler played taps. One by one those who loved Mark took a last walk by the coffin and sprinkled it with holy water.

I was the last one to bless the coffin. As I stood there, one of the soldiers who had acted as pallbearer came up to me. “Were you Mark’s math teacher?” he asked. I nodded as I continued to stare at the coffin. “Mark talked about you a lot,” he said.

After the funeral, most of Mark’s former classmates headed to Chuck’s farmhouse for lunch. Mark’s mother and father were there, obviously waiting for me. “We want to show you something,” his father said, taking a wallet out of his pocket. “They found this on Mark when he was killed. We thought you might recognize it.”

Opening the billfold, he carefully removed two worn pieces of notebook paper that had obviously been taped, folded, and refolded many times. I knew without looking that the papers were the ones on which I had listed all the good things each of Mark’s classmates had said about him. “Thank you so much for doing that” Mark’s mother said. “As you can see, Mark treasured it.”

Mark’s classmates started to gather around us. Charlie smiled rather sheepishly and said, “I still have my list. It’s in the top drawer of my desk at home.”

Chuck’s wife said, “Chuck asked me to put this in our wedding album.”

“I have mine too,” Marilyn said. “It’s in my diary.”

Then Vicki, another classmate, reached into her pocketbook, took out her wallet, and showed her worn and frazzled list to the group. “I carry this with me at all times,” Vicki said without batting an eyelash. “I think we all saved our lists.”

That’s when I finally sat down and cried. I cried for Mark and for all his friends who would never see him again.

Philippians 1:3: “Every time I think of you, I give thanks to my God.”

today’sTHOT============================

Courage is fear that has said its prayers.

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Kaput

Our computer died yesterday.

I logged on yesterday afternoon to check email. It came up, started checking email, said 5%, 11%…and then the screen went blank. The hard drive groaned, shuddered, and then died. No response when you try to turn it on or off. The fan was still running, though.

This morning Steve suggested I try unplugging it. I did that. Plugged it back in. The fan came back on, then the hard drive groaned and shuddered a little, then the whole thing shut down. Pushing any of the buttons is to no avail. I think we have a major hard drive failure here. Kaput.

Not to worry though. I backed up the whole thing on Tuesday, and I’ve hardly worked on it since. And I was thinking of switching all my stuff over to “Steve’s” computer anyway since it is a laptop and I get tired of being in the basement and it would be so much easier to watch the boys while working on stuff if I used it [and Steve said I could since he wouldn’t be using it much once he finished his paper]. So no great loss or anything.

My goal for the weekend was to do things that are hard to do when it’s just me and the boys. Like cook good food that requires a little bit of time in the kitchen. Wash the car. Read a book. Stuff like that.

But no, it was not to be. This morning, Steve was getting dressed after his shower and somehow pulled a muscle in his back or something. Basically, it’s excruciating to move. The simplest tasks are now huge ordeals. He’s sitting on the couch and only gets up to go to the bathroom, which about kills him. Ben is a chatterbox and is driving us crazy. Of course, Steve cannot help with Joey. Or Ben. And since Steve can’t do anything for himself – like flush the toilet – I have the equivalent of another child to care for.

Tomorrow Steve’s brother is coming over to celebrate Memorial Day. Perhaps he can do the grilling since I haven’t a clue. It was raining this morning so sending Ben outside wasn’t an option. I still haven’t put my makeup on or donned my glasses (usually I wash them and put them on after finishing my makeup and hair). Not wearing glasses gives me a headache. Constant yelling at poor Ben who just won’t shut up is wearing on me too. He simply doesn’t understand that jumping on the couch next to Daddy causes Daddy great pain. No, Ben, no.

Steve was going to help me clean the house today since my shoulder has been acting up. I have full range of motion if I move it slowly and deliberately. But the dumbest actions done in normal use cause it to twist wrong and cause me pain strong enough to invoke nausea. I was supposed to be the one getting extra care this weekend. So my shoulder could heal. But no. Such great plans I had.

I was so busy last week that I hardly touched my knitting. I’m thinking I need to return to it as a refuge. Send the boys outside and set up a lawn chair and watch them play while I knit. The garden is a pit of mud so no planting can be done…which is also why it hasn’t gotten done already – every time I get ready to plant, we get some rain. Steve’s dad said he’s going to have to hire someone to help finish planting since he cannot possibly get it all done himself in the time he has left – weather-permitting – to get it done. I am not the only one.

I really would like to turn in my resignation right now. I’m just not sure who to give it to. But no time to think about that anyway. The laundry needs to be rebooted and Ben has something in his eye. Steve needs the computer back so he can work on his paper. I shall check the NASCAR schedule and then go try to be a good wife and mother.

This too shall pass….

Here’s to Five Years!

Steve & Tana

Today is our fifth anniversary. I went through all of my digital pictures and this is the only picture I could find of the two of us – just the two of us, you know, without a herd of family standing around us like those pictures you take when the entire family gets together at weddings and funerals. Seems as though I’m the one who is always holding the camera so I have lots of pictures of Steve, a few someone else took of me, but slim pickin’s for the two of us together. That’s okay. Being seen together in lots of pictures is not requisite to a happy marriage.

This picture was actually taken soon after we started dating. We met during the first part of December and that picture was taken after the turn of the year but still during the winter. A great aunt of mine had died and I wanted to go to her funeral since I lived close enough to drive there. Dad was also going to be there, so he was the first person in my immediate family to meet Steve. That picture was taken out at the cemetery after the funeral. It was cold and windy…which should explain the looks on our faces.

It was so funny…apparently I have this habit that Steve had picked up on where I chew my food mostly with my mouth closed but I open my mouth to breath for the last few chews before I swallowed. At one point while we were up in South Dakota, Steve was sitting between me and my dad…and he said it was that same chewing thing except it was in stereo! Oh my! The things we learn about ourselves when we date someone…

We dated for about a year and a half and then we got married. We eloped. Our wedding budget for everything including the honeymoon was less than $500. We went to Geneva for our honeymoon. Geneva, Nebraska, that is. There’s a quaint bed and breakfast there that we stayed at. Ah, the memories!

Before we got married, I was living in a house that I owned and Steve was living in an apartment. The week before we got married, since we were going to be rearranging all the funiture anyway to make room for his things, we decided it was the perfect opportunity to pull back the carpet and refinish the wood floors underneath. We got married on a Tuesday, and the weekend before (ten days before our wedding), we pulled back the carpet and started working on the floor. According to what we’d read on the internet, it would be a weekend project with sanding the floors down, staining them, and then polishing them with polyurethane, including the drying time between each step.

Yeah, according to what we’d read on the internet… We spent our entire weekend trying to sand it down to get it even. We had asked for the belt sander at Home Depot but they told us it was more sander than we needed so they rented us the other sander. Turns out the belt sander really was what we needed. After a weekend of getting nowhere, I complained and got them to credit what we’d spent toward the correct machine we’d asked for in the first place. So then all week long, we worked every evening until midnight as well as the entire next weekend as well in order to get it done. Oh, there was this asphalt tile in one of the bedrooms that had literally melted into the floor so we had to dissolve it with whatever chemicals like dissolving nail polish. That took most of the afternoon on Saturday, including more than one trip to Home Depot to buy something that might work better. I’m telling you, it was the project from hell! But he still married me.

So last night we celebrated our anniversary. When Steve went to open the bottle of wine, the corkscrew broke. We had to use a pliers to grab onto what was left of the corkscrew imbedded in the cork and twist and pull and mess around in order to get the cork out. He used his locking pliers. Ah, yes! Another simple task gone haywire. Our first five years of marriage have been very good, but based on those two simple tasks gone haywire, the next five years are sure to be glorious!

Wanna read a story with me?

Want to read with me?

My Little Fling

Okay, the other day I talked about my valient efforts on those two huge, intimidating projects. Then you know what I did? I stopped working on them and worked on something else. Namely, my sock for the month of May.

Now you must understand, I said earlier this year that I was going to knit one sock a month for a total of six pairs during 2007. I’ve stayed on track so far, but each sock has rolled over ever so slightly into the next month before it was finished. Except for this month.

Yes, during the month of May, I decided that my next pair of socks would be Monkey socks by Cookie A which I would be knitting with some Cherry Tree Hill sock yarn in my stash. So I cast on about this time last week, and I finished Sunday. And yes, I think that would be a personal record for how many days it takes me to knit one sock. This would be a really bad picture of the first Monkey sock. [Better picture when they’re both finished…promise.]

Monkey One

I’m telling you…it’s a really fun pattern to knit, though. There’s some blogger I saw somewhere (don’t remember where at the moment) who has knit nine pairs of these socks. Though I have yet to finish my first pair, I certainly understand the addiction to that stitch pattern. It’s simple, easy, predictable, has variety – it’s everything you would want in a stitch pattern. A happy medium between the monotony of the Charcoal Slogalong and the tedium of St. Brigid.

Speaking of which, here is a picture I took right before I started writing this post.

St. Brigid/Slogalong Progress

I have, in fact, finished the back of the Charcoal Slogalong, and I just began the sixth repeat in St. Brigid. You can also see in that photo the provisional cast on for the front of the Charcoal Slogalong, though I haven’t gotten past the “provision” and started working with the real yarn on the front yet. If you look at the size of the balls of yarn, though, you can see they’re progressing neck-in-neck. Cables really do use more yarn. Just saying is all…

So now back to your regularly scheduled programming. Joey’s new diapers arrived a couple hours ago and I need to go wash them so we can use them. We had two plumber-butt blowouts this morning…I’m anxious to retire our current stash…

Cheers!

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